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ASBURY AUTOMOTIVE GROUP INC (ABG)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Record Q4 revenue of $4.50B (+18% y/y) and gross profit of $749.9M (+11% y/y); GAAP diluted EPS was $6.54 vs $2.70 y/y, while adjusted EPS was $7.26 (-2% y/y) due to non-core items .
- Parts & Service performance was the standout: gross profit reached $340.1M (+19% y/y) with 57.6% margin; same-store Parts & Service gross profit rose 11% and customer pay was up 13% .
- Operating discipline: adjusted SG&A was 63.0% of gross profit (all-stores), improving sequentially for the second straight quarter; same-store adjusted SG&A was 62.0% . Management emphasized Tekion pilots to lower bolt-ons and SG&A over time .
- Outlook and catalysts: management expects new-vehicle GPU to normalize to $2,500–$3,000 over time (timing mid/late 2025 or early 2026); 2025 SG&A mid-60s% and capex ~$250M each in 2025–2026; TCA expected pretax ~$8M in 2025 with a ~$2.35 EPS noncash deferral headwind; improvement at Stellantis is a potential tailwind as mix/inventory normalizes .
- Estimates context: S&P Global consensus for Q4 2024 was unavailable due to data access limits; comparisons vs Street estimates not provided (S&P Global data unavailable).
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Parts & Service momentum: Q4 Parts & Service gross profit rose 19% y/y to $340.1M, with margin expansion to 57.6%; same-store gross profit was +11%, customer pay +13% .
- Operating efficiency: adjusted SG&A as % of gross profit improved to 63.0% (all-stores) and 62.0% (same-store), marking back-to-back quarterly improvements; management: “delivering lower SG&A costs as a percent of gross profit for the second quarter in a row” .
- Volume strength despite mix headwinds: total new units +18% y/y and used retail +15% y/y; revenue mix held stable with new at 54.5% of revenue and F&I PVR of $2,236 sequentially improved vs Q3 .
What Went Wrong
- Front-end margin compression: total gross margin fell 101 bps y/y to 16.6%; total new-vehicle GPU declined to $3,641 (down 15% y/y); used retail GPU $1,449 (-15% y/y) .
- Stellantis drag: management cited Stellantis as a “major headwind” in Q4; inventory and incentives forced low GPUs; improvement is expected as mix/orders normalize but will take time .
- F&I headwinds and mix: F&I PVR decreased ~3% y/y to $2,236 (same-store $2,238) with deferred revenue impacts from TCA contributing to declines; TCA deferral headwinds are expected to intensify in 2025–2026 before turning tailwind thereafter .
Financial Results
Segment breakdown (revenue and gross profit):
Key KPIs:
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Asbury delivered strong fourth quarter results, setting records for total revenue, and growing our Parts & Service gross profit by double digits… delivering lower SG&A costs as a percent of gross profit for the second quarter in a row.” — CEO David Hult .
- “In 2025, we expect new vehicle gross profit per vehicle somewhere in the $2,500 to $3,000 range.” — CEO David Hult .
- “Our 4-store pilot with Tekion went live in October… reduce plug-ons by about 70%… easier to onboard, more efficient, lower cost per transaction… material savings in SG&A.” — CEO David Hult .
- “Adjusted SG&A… came in at 63%, a sequential improvement… we anticipate 2025 SG&A… in the mid-60s.” — CFO Michael Welch .
- “We anticipate 2025 TCA pretax income to be approximately $8 million, which includes a noncash deferral hit of $62 million or $2.35 per diluted share… peak deferral to occur in 2026.” — CFO Michael Welch .
Q&A Highlights
- GPUs and normalization: Management sees GPUs stabilizing with luxury strength; long-run new-vehicle GPU “new normal” $2,500–$3,000 timing mid/late 2025 or early 2026; Q4 benefited from seasonality and brand mix .
- Tekion benefits: ~70% reduction in plug-ons; lower toll fees; faster onboarding (service advisor from five days to one); productivity gains expected to drive SG&A savings over full rollout .
- Stellantis outlook: Inventory days down, incentives up; wrong inventory mix hurt Q4 GPUs; restrictions lifting should allow ordering the options customers want; expectation of gradual improvement .
- F&I dynamics: Mix remains ~1/3 finance reserve, ~2/3 products; training focus on bottom 20% stores; TCA deferral headwind will lower consolidated PVR in 2025–2026 before turning tailwind .
- Macro and demand: Post-election “uptick” in traffic; January mixed due to weather but parts & service, sales encouraging; affordability concerns persist yet sentiment improved .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus estimates for Q4 2024 revenue and EPS were unavailable due to data access limits; as a result, comparisons to Street expectations could not be provided (S&P Global data unavailable).
- Implication: Without consensus benchmarks, the focus shifts to sequential and y/y trends and management’s quantified forward guidance .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Parts & Service is the core earnings engine: sustained double-digit customer pay growth and margin expansion provide resilience against front-end volatility .
- Operating leverage discipline continues: sequential SG&A % declines and Tekion-driven structural savings should support margins through cycles .
- Front-end margins likely to normalize lower over time; manage expectations around the $2.5–3.0K new GPU steady-state and watch mix/luxury availability .
- Near-term TCA accounting headwind is material in 2025–2026 (~$2.35 EPS impact in 2025) but sets up a multi-year tailwind thereafter; track rollout milestones (Florida Q1, Koons Q2) .
- Stellantis recovery is a credible upside catalyst as ordering restrictions lift and mix improves; monitor brand-specific inventory and incentive trends .
- Liquidity and balance sheet remain solid ($828M liquidity; 2.85x transaction-adjusted net leverage), supporting capex and buybacks while integrating M&A .
- Trading lens: Favor exposure into Parts & Service momentum and SG&A efficiency; be prepared for headline volatility around TCA accounting and OEM-specific developments (Stellantis, recalls/stop-sales) .